The Prague Post - How did this man's brain turn to glass? Scientists have a theory

EUR -
AED 4.172469
AFN 81.226466
ALL 100.310777
AMD 444.244667
ANG 2.03356
AOA 1042.821867
ARS 1220.13733
AUD 1.807145
AWG 2.044748
AZN 1.935661
BAM 1.960237
BBD 2.294213
BDT 138.054564
BGN 1.961833
BHD 0.42777
BIF 3323.851373
BMD 1.135971
BND 1.500396
BOB 7.851771
BRL 6.659749
BSD 1.136282
BTN 97.823546
BWP 15.847869
BYN 3.718549
BYR 22265.033118
BZD 2.282366
CAD 1.575649
CDF 3265.353315
CHF 0.926352
CLF 0.02877
CLP 1104.02802
CNY 8.283619
CNH 8.27647
COP 4864.114557
CRC 583.02471
CUC 1.135971
CUP 30.103234
CVE 111.723203
CZK 25.124845
DJF 201.885227
DKK 7.469696
DOP 70.093827
DZD 149.546094
EGP 58.259952
ERN 17.039566
ETB 147.907835
FJD 2.589451
FKP 0.877892
GBP 0.868347
GEL 3.135724
GGP 0.877892
GHS 17.612667
GIP 0.877892
GMD 81.97757
GNF 9843.413373
GTQ 8.764715
GYD 237.731535
HKD 8.807798
HNL 29.390533
HRK 7.534333
HTG 149.179304
HUF 414.088552
IDR 19109.585272
ILS 4.201662
IMP 0.877892
INR 98.038602
IQD 1485.451499
IRR 47798.30669
ISK 147.251747
JEP 0.877892
JMD 179.590494
JOD 0.805448
JPY 162.999927
KES 147.160836
KGS 98.898799
KHR 4548.356066
KMF 499.314282
KPW 1022.440932
KRW 1648.225426
KWD 0.348815
KYD 0.941553
KZT 586.195075
LAK 24617.850658
LBP 102082.322949
LKR 337.409727
LRD 227.259252
LSL 22.186263
LTL 3.354228
LVL 0.687138
LYD 6.294087
MAD 10.683391
MDL 20.156928
MGA 5200.797548
MKD 63.597766
MMK 2385.165785
MNT 3990.8206
MOP 9.079058
MRU 45.060918
MUR 51.300752
MVR 17.547018
MWK 1971.304559
MXN 23.079983
MYR 5.077285
MZN 72.556916
NAD 22.186263
NGN 1817.358117
NIO 41.816399
NOK 12.110548
NPR 156.935292
NZD 1.95045
OMR 0.437333
PAB 1.135971
PEN 4.235062
PGK 4.652358
PHP 65.146942
PKR 318.897173
PLN 4.333147
PYG 9105.931016
QAR 4.135359
RON 5.052464
RSD 118.877306
RUB 95.882169
RWF 1609.569838
SAR 4.260315
SBD 9.65559
SCR 16.416149
SDG 681.936428
SEK 11.095337
SGD 1.512044
SHP 0.892695
SLE 25.877842
SLL 23820.746739
SOS 647.75997
SRD 41.645037
STD 23512.307787
SVC 9.940167
SYP 14770.008163
SZL 22.186263
THB 38.478429
TJS 12.348911
TMT 3.974862
TND 3.444377
TOP 2.736183
TRY 43.249673
TTD 7.719493
TWD 37.26551
TZS 3032.703706
UAH 46.978735
UGX 4186.088837
USD 1.135971
UYU 49.285695
UZS 14733.852796
VES 84.749525
VND 29279.215196
VUV 142.891608
WST 3.235249
XAF 665.752377
XAG 0.035233
XAU 0.000351
XCD 3.074402
XDR 0.849168
XOF 665.752377
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.736868
ZAR 21.713523
ZMK 10225.106937
ZMW 31.898096
ZWL 365.782223
  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    21.9

    -1.37%

  • JRI

    0.1450

    11.91

    +1.22%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    10.18

    -0.29%

  • BTI

    1.0200

    41.57

    +2.45%

  • BCC

    0.9800

    95.66

    +1.02%

  • NGG

    2.4700

    68.06

    +3.63%

  • GSK

    1.0400

    34.64

    +3%

  • CMSC

    -0.3500

    21.8

    -1.61%

  • RIO

    1.9900

    56.86

    +3.5%

  • RBGPF

    62.0100

    62.01

    +100%

  • BCE

    0.3800

    21.36

    +1.78%

  • AZN

    1.4200

    66.29

    +2.14%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    49.12

    +0.2%

  • VOD

    0.2800

    8.73

    +3.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    9.12

    -0.11%

  • BP

    0.3600

    26.59

    +1.35%

How did this man's brain turn to glass? Scientists have a theory
How did this man's brain turn to glass? Scientists have a theory / Photo: Handout - PRESS OFFICE OF THE HERCULANEUM ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE/AFP/File

How did this man's brain turn to glass? Scientists have a theory

A young man was lying in his bed when a viciously hot cloud of ash swept down from the erupting Mount Vesuvius and turned his brain to glass almost 2,000 years ago.

Text size:

That is the theory Italian scientists proposed on Thursday to explain the strange case of the ancient Roman's brain, which they said is the only human tissue ever known to have naturally turned to glass.

This unique brain could rewrite the story of one of history's most famous natural disasters -- and help protect people against this little-understood phenomenon during future volcanic eruptions, the scientists suggested.

When Mount Vesuvius -- near the modern-day Italian city of Naples -- erupted in 79 AD, the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum were buried in a fast-moving blanket of rock and ash called a pyroclastic flow.

Thousands of bodies have been discovered at the sites effectively frozen in time, offering a glimpse into the daily life of ancient Rome.

In the 1960s, the charred remains of a man aged roughly 20 were found on a wooden bed in a Herculaneum building dedicated to worshipping the Roman Emperor Augustus.

Italian anthropologist Pier Paolo Petrone, a co-author of a new study, noticed something strange in 2018.

"I saw that something was shimmery in the shattered skull," he told AFP in 2020.

What was left of the man's brain had been transformed into fragments of shiny black glass.

- 'Amazing, truly unexpected' -

These "chips" are up to a centimetre wide, volcanologist Guido Giordano, the lead author of the new study in Scientific Reports, told AFP.

When the scientists studied the glass using an electron microscope, they discovered an "amazing, truly unexpected thing," he said.

Complex networks of neurons, axons and other identifiable parts of the man's brain and spinal cord were preserved in the glass, according to the study.

How this happened is something of a mystery.

Glass occurs rarely in nature because it requires extremely hot temperatures to cool very rapidly, leaving no time for crystallisation. It is usually caused by meteorites, lightning or lava.

This is even more unlikely to happen to human tissues, because they are mostly made out of water.

The Roman's brain being preserved in glass is the "only such occurrence on Earth" ever documented for human or animal tissue, the study said.

The scientists determined that the brain must have been exposed to temperatures soaring above 510 degrees Celsius (950 Fahrenheit).

That is hotter than the pyroclastic flow that buried the city, which topped out at around 465C.

Then the brain needed to rapidly cool down -- and all this had to happen before the flow arrived.

The "only possible scenario" was that an ash cloud emitted by Vesuvius delivered an initial hot blast before quickly dissipating, the study said.

This theory is supported by a thin layer of ash that settled in the city shortly before it was smothered.

This would mean the people of Herculaneum were actually killed by the ash cloud -- not the pyroclastic flow as had long been thought.

- 'Poorly-studied' threat -

Giordano hoped the research would lead to more awareness about the threat posed by these hot ash clouds, which remain "very poorly studied" because they leave little trace behind.

French volcanologists Katia and Maurice Krafft, the subjects of the Oscar-nominated 2022 documentary "Fire of Love", were killed by such an ash cloud, Giordano said.

And some of the 215 people killed during the 2018 eruption of Guatemala's Fuego volcano were also victims of this phenomenon, he added.

"There is a window of survivability" for these hot blasts, he emphasised, adding that fitting houses near volcanoes to withstand high heat could help.

But why did the man with the glass brain uniquely suffer this fate?

Unlike Pompeii, Herculaneum had some time to respond to the eruption. All the other bodies discovered there were clearly trying to flee into the Mediterranean Sea.

However the man, who is thought to have been the guardian of the Collegium building, stayed in bed in the middle of town, so was the first hit.

"Maybe he was drunk," Giordano joked, adding that we will likely never know the truth.

Z.Marek--TPP